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Daily Archives: April 13, 2017
Leitrim welcome for CF drugs – Leitrim Observer
Posted: April 13, 2017 at 11:53 pm
Cystic fibrosis patients in Sligo-Leitrim are set to benefit from a new deal between the Health Service Executive and pharmaceutical company, Vertex, which will see Orkambi and Kalydeco made available from next month.
The HSE are now working to finalise the contractual terms to make sure we have the best and most robust deal possible for CF patients and the healthcare service overall.
Sligo-Leitrim TD Tony McLoughlin says that the deal announced by Minister for Health, Simon Harris is a landmark decision for CF patients and their families. The HSE and Vertex have reached an agreement in principle on the commercial terms for the supply to Irish patients of Orkambi for patients aged 12 years an older and for Kalydeco for patients aged 2 to 5 years and for other treatments and age cohorts following market authorisation in Europe.
This is great news for CF patients here in Sligo-Leitrim. I know that this has been a particularly difficult time for all cystic fibrosis patients and their families and hopefully this announcement gives them some degree of relief and certainty.
I want to thank my Fine Gael colleague, the Minister for Health, Simon Harris, and the HSE for bringing this deal to fruition. I know they have been working hard on this deal for a number of months."stu
Speaking of the announcement, Minister Harris said, I was very pleased to be in a position to bring this news to CF patients and their families this week. I hope that it will help to finally put people's minds at rest, knowing that the drugs their family and friends need will be available to them from the beginning of next month.
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Chrissy Teigen: We Shouldn’t ‘Assume All Women’s Goals Are To Have Kids’ – Huffington Post
Posted: at 11:53 pm
Chrissy Teigen thinks its important for people to leave it to women to discuss if theywantchildren instead of simply assuming every woman does.
The model and mother of 11-month-old daughter Luna sat down with Refinery29s Arianna Davis to talk about her struggle with post-partum depression and why our society needs to accept women who choose to lead childfree lives.The interview is part of R29s new series Mothership, which highlights women and their different experiences with motherhood or their choices to be childfree.
When Davis broached the subject of motherhood as an if, not a when, for women, Teigen replied that women should have the space to discuss motherhood as an option,not a guarantee.
Davis revealed that she is personally struggling with the decision to have kids or not, especially when people assume everyone wants children.
Well, first of all, I want to commend you in your decision to be open about maybe not having children at all, Teigen told Davis. I think its really commendable to even doubt the process out loud, because I dont feel like people should be pressured to have children.
Teigen said that all too often people are appalled when a woman reveals it was her choice to live a childfree life.
Im sure that when you announce that fact [that youre trying to decide if you want children] to somebody, theyre very quick to be like, Gasp! Why dont you want kids? Teigen said. And Ive never been that way with people, because I dont think any of us should assume all womens goals are to have kids. Its a choice!
This isnt the first time Teigens spoken out about the pressures women face to have children.
In a 2015 interview with Tyra Banks, Teigen who, at that point, did not have children explained how hard it was for her and her husband to have a child and the shame she experienced surrounding infertility.
Its been a process!Weve seen fertility doctors. And then once you open up about all those things to other people, you start learning that a lot of people in your life are seeing these people, and they have this shame about it, she told Banks. So anytime somebody asks me if Im going to have kids, Im like, One day,youre going to ask that to the wrong girl whos really struggling, and its going to be really hurtful to them. And I hate that. So I hate it. Stop asking me!
Head over to Refinery29 to read Teigens full interview.
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Chrissy Teigen: We Shouldn't 'Assume All Women's Goals Are To Have Kids' - Huffington Post
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Scientists push back over criticism that they pander to political correctness for rejecting genetic-based male … – Genetic Literacy Project
Posted: at 11:52 pm
Mainstream journals increasingly publish studies that reveal how misleading assumptions about the sexes bias the framing of hypotheses, research design and interpretation of findingsSome of the errors and traps we identified included human neuroimaging studies with small sample sizes, and the common snapshot approach, which interprets neural associations with sex as a matter of timeless and universal male and female essencesWe also expressed concern about studies that draw on and reinforce stereotypes.
But misplaced fears of the effects of feminism on science potentially threaten this. [In 2016], a number of news articles reported that scientists had been ignoring medically critical sex differences in the brain, for fear of being labelled sexist.
[We believe that]many variables correlate with biological sex, including things such as body weight and muscle mass, as well as human-specific variables such as reinforced skills and experiences. If these arent taken into account, differences between the sexes may be inappropriately chalked up to the effects of biological sex. And the results of this misattribution can be harmful for women and men.
The GLP aggregated and excerpted this blog/article to reflect the diversity of news, opinion, and analysis. Read full, original post:Weve been labelled anti-sex difference for demanding greater scientific rigour
For more background on the Genetic Literacy Project, read GLP on Wikipedia
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Eugenics victim still waiting for final payment – Wilmington Star News – StarNewsOnline.com
Posted: at 11:52 pm
The N.C. Department of Administration sent Brashears a letter March 21 stating the final payment is stalled until further notice.
BRUNSWICK COUNTY -- Local eugenics victim Elnora MillsBrashears still has no idea when her last payment from the state will come, but she has someone new to keep her company while she waits.
The N.C. Department of Administration on behalf of the compensation program for victims of the eugenics program sent Brashearsa letter March 21 stating the final payment is stalled until further notice.
The third and final payment cannot proceed until there is a final determination of the total number of the qualified recipientseligible to get a share of the money, according to the letter. The General Assembly appropriated funds to compensate more than 100 victims in 2013.
The Brunswick County resident was sterilized in 1967 without her knowledge when she was a teenager. Brashearswent into the hospital to have an appendectomy, but had no idea the state also removed her ability to have children. The state eugenic's program sterilized more than 7,000 men and women that were deemed unfit to have children between 1929 and 1974.
Since 2013, Brashearshas received $35,000 of the $50,000 that was promised to her. She is still paying for her husband's burial after he died in May 2016. But she has since remarried. She is also battling esophageal cancer with an upcoming surgery she said could very well be life-threatening.
"I'm going to Raleigh," Brashearssaid. Her husband Randy Brashears said he wants to support her going before officials and telling her story in person.
Randy, a Leland resident, said he met her when he was doing research for his novel about eugenics programs. The two wed in February.
"He's so good to me," Brashearssaid, shaking her head and smiling.
This is not the first timeBrashears received a letter from the state informing her there was another hold on the money. Brashearsis frustrated the payout is being stalled after what she has been through. Some individuals have appealed, claiming they should be compensated as part of the program.Brashearswas sent letters about the hold-up in payments throughout 2016.
She needs the money soon, she said, to continue fixing up her home.
"We understand your frustration in the amount of time it is taking to distribute the final payments to eligible claimants," the letter states. But she said they will never understand her frustration in not being able to have the children and grandchildren she always dreamed of having.
Reporter Ashley Morris can be reached at 910-343-2096 or Ashley.Morris@starnewsonline.com
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Eugenics victim still waiting for final payment - Wilmington Star News - StarNewsOnline.com
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The Evolution of the Eagles’ Practice Squad – Bleeding Green Nation
Posted: at 11:52 pm
Every season there are 10 young guys who participate in practice during the week, but not on Sundays. These players make up the practice squad (PS). Snagging a spot on the much-more limited roster isnt a guarantee for the entire season -- in fact, the Eagles released and re-signed players at record pace last season, with players bouncing back and forth within days.
Several of the players who started the 2016 season on the practice squad ended up making the active roster by the end of the year thanks to improved performances and slew of injuries. When the young players are called up to the big show, they have to make the most of every opportunity.
You only need to look at last seasons practice squad to see that it is a constantly evolving group; one that is largely dependent on the health and success of the players on the active roster.
The practice squad is a landing spot for young players who are either new to the league or two-year players who have a limited number of games on the active roster.
The first set of moves to the 2016 practice squad came just a week after the initial group of players was announced. Having just traded quarterback Sam Bradford to Minnesota, the team decided theyd bring in a third quarterback Aaron Murray instead of holding on to wide receiver Marcus Johnson who ended up back on the practice squad by the end of the season.
It is a constant juggle between keeping players that can be developed versus keeping players that add depth to thinning and injured positions. With no rules to dictate the frequency teams can release and re-sign players from the practice squad, these changes are sometimes made on a day-by-day basis making a valid argument that Howie Roseman might have an addiction to transactions.
Sometimes the practice squad is just a place for the Eagles to hold onto potential back-ups without having to pay full price. Other times, though, its used a way to develop young players into the type of guy who would not only make the final 53-man roster, but excel at his position.
Four players from the 2016 practice squad made the leap to Made Man by the end of the season: Byron Marshall (RB), C.J. Smith (CB), Paul Turner (WR) and Terrell Watson (RB). Watson was a late-season addition; joining the Eagles practice squad in late-December and just one week later making the active roster.
Marshall: Added to the active roster Dec. 13, the running back was brought in just after the team was forced to move three players to IR including rookie rusher Wendell Smallwood. He saw playing time in two of the three remaining games of the season, and recorded 64 yards on 19 carries, along with 10 yards on three receptions. The undrafted free agent could might see time on the practice squad once again in 2017, but if hes able to build off of his limited snap count, theres a chance they keep him among the final 53.
Smith: Another player brought in toward the end of the season, C.J. Smith finally saw some playing time in December. The cornerback is another product of North Dakota State University same as quarterback Carson Wentz but despite a significant lack of depth in the secondary for the Eagles, Smith only recorded one tackle and didnt see too many snaps. The position group hasnt been bolstered that much this offseason, so Smith could have a good shot of making the roster in 2017.
Turner: One of the stranger players on the practice squad in 2016, the wide receiver actually made the final 53-man roster...and then was released and re-signed to the PS just days later. Turner quickly became a fan-favorite after a standout preseason performance, including a 71-yard punt return for a touchdown. He was brought up to the active roster in late-November, and saw snaps in four games. The big upside with Turner is his big play ability; the wideout snagged just nine passes in 2016 but amassed 126 yards, averaging 14.0 yards per reception.
Watson: The running back was responsible for one of the best feel-good moments of the 2016 season. Watson only saw playing time in the final game of the season against the Cowboys, but on a drive that was clearly designed for him, ended up in the endzone for his first professional touchdown. The score was instantly memorable, as it marked a defining moment for a young man who survived a difficult childhood and overcame a learning disability. Watson is one player fans will hope to see among the final roster next season, and enjoy every moment of his success.
There are two players who spent time on the Eagles practice squad last season that have a chance to earn a spot on the active roster this year, Aaron Grymes (DB) and Aziz Shittu (DT).
Grymes played in the CFL for three years with the Edmonton Eskimos before signing with the Eagles; he made Phillys roster for a short stint before getting injured, and could earn more playing time during camp. Shittu is another young guy who has a good chance of making the final roster in 2017, especially with Beau Allens latest injury. With Allen out until at least the beginning of the season, Shittu has a real shot of snagging additional snaps with a consistent performance.
Less likely: The chances are slimmer for Anthony Denham, Don Cherry, Marcus Johnson and David Watford, unless they step it up during camp. If Andrew Bonnet -- another NDSU alum -- can step up and be better than Chris Pantale was last year, theres a chance he earns a role as a fourth tight end/fullback.
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The Evolution of the Eagles' Practice Squad - Bleeding Green Nation
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Archosaur fossils found in Tanzania are forcing scientists to rethink the evolution of dinosaurs – Los Angeles Times
Posted: at 11:52 pm
Scientists have identified one of the earliest known dinosaur relatives and it doesnt look anything like they expected.
Researchers had thought that the oldest dinosaur cousins would look rather like small, two-legged dinosaurs themselves. Instead, Teleocrater rhadinus actually stretched seven to 10 feet long, boasted a long neck and tail, and walked on all fours.
The findings, described in the journal Nature, could force paleontologists to redraw their understanding of dinosaurs origins, as well as the nature of the reptiles that came before them.
This just goes to show that theres a lot more out there that we just didnt know, especially the early history of the larger group that dinosaurs belonged to: Archosauria, said lead author Sterling Nesbitt, a vertebrate paleontologist at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg.
Dinosaurs are part of a larger group known as the archosaurs a lineage of reptiles that split into a bird-line branch that includes pterosaurs, dinosaurs and birds, and a crocodilian branch whose living members today include crocodiles and alligators.
Paleontologists have long tried to predict what those early bird-line reptiles looked like, soon after the split with the crocodilian branch. But they havent been able to do so because of the large gaps in the fossil record of the transitional period before dinosaurs emerged in the mid-to-late Triassic Period, roughly 230 million years ago. Which dinosaur traits are unique to dinosaurs, and which are shared with these earlier archosaurs, they have wondered? Without a wide range of older archosaur fossils, it was difficult to say for sure.
Still, many figured that the line of animals that gave rise to the flying reptiles known as pterosaurs, and later the dinosaurs, which themselves gave rise to birds (the only surviving member of the bird-line branch) might have originally come from a chicken-sized, two-legged, dinosaur-like archosaur.
The Teleocrater fossils described by Nesbitt and his colleagues may be proving that idea wrong. This species isnt exactly new to science: Paleontologist F. Rex Parrington first found fossils in Tanzania in 1933 and English paleontologist Alan J. Charig (a posthumous co-author of this paper) characterized the bones roughly two decades later. But the first specimen was missing crucial bones that would have allowed Charig to tell whether this was a bird-branch or crocodile-branch species of archosaur.
To help fill in those key missing details, Nesbitt and his colleagues studied the original specimen together with three new partial Teleocrater specimens, discovered in 2015 not far from where those original fossils were found. Researchers usually look for certain physical features on the skeleton that remain preserved in a lineage even as species differentiate over time. In the case of Teleocrater, it had a number of markers that identified it as a bird-lineage archosaur, such as a telltale depression on top of the head. It also had a muscle scar high on the thigh bone a characteristic you see even in chicken legs today. (In crocodilians and in lizards, the muscles are more evenly distributed across the leg.)
But even as Nesbitt and his colleagues identified Teleocrater as a bird-like archosaur, they also found surprisingly crocodilian characteristics, including the animals ankle bones. In fact, the entire body plan, with its long, low, four-legged profile, seems in some ways more reminiscent of crocodiles than of theropods, a group of dinosaurs that includes Tyrannosaurus rex and also gave rise to the birds we know today.
The ankle was really a big surprise with this animal, because all of the archosaurs on the bird side of the tree [including] dinosaurs all have what we call a bird-like ankle, which has a pretty simple hinge, and all the archosaurs on the croc side of the tree have what we call a crocodile normal ankle or a crocodile-like ankle, Nesbitt said. That tells us that the crocodile ankle was primitive for the earliest archosaurs and that the bird ankle was derived from a crocodile-like ankle.
This is strange, because that high-thigh muscle scar found in bird-branch archosaurs is typical of animals that walk on two legs not animals like Teleocrater, which appeared to walk on all fours.
So what explains this weird muscle configuration? For now, its unclear, said Nesbitt, who pointed out that many physical features evolved for one purpose before being conscripted into other duties. Feathers, for example, were probably used for insulation, camouflage and even mating displays long before they were repurposed for flight.
Its something we see commonly in vertebrate or just animal history, Nesbitt said.
In any case, that ancient shared ancestor of both crocodiles and dinosaurs (and birds) may have looked more like the former than the latter. And this could change our understanding of which features were originally from early archosaurs, and which emerged much later. It may also cause scientists to reevaluate which ancient archosaurs they study to try to understand what a dinosaur ancestor might have looked like.
The findings, together with other recent discoveries, also highlight how diverse and successful a group the nondinosaur archosaurs were, even if they have fewer representatives among our current fossil records.
People have concentrated on dinosaurs for a really long time; they were really successful for almost 180 million years and they continue on as successful birds today, Nesbitt said. But in the Triassic, they were just a small component of this big radiation of the relatives of dinosaurs.
Nesbitt and his colleagues plan to return to Tanzania in May to try to fill in more gaps in left in their partial skeletons, and more gaps in our understanding of these long-gone species.
Follow @aminawrite on Twitter for more science news and "like" Los Angeles Times Science & Health on Facebook.
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Donald R. Grebien: Evolution of Pawtucket is underway – The Providence Journal
Posted: at 11:52 pm
By Donald R. Grebien
Pawtucket is at a critical point in its history and the city is evolving. With a number of exciting public and private investments in itsdowntown either happening or in the pipeline, now is Pawtuckets time to align these efforts and set the stage for themto catalyze others.
The birthplace of the American Industrial Revolution, Pawtucket is poised to undergo a 21st century evolution into Rhode Islands premier arts and cultural destination, an ideal community to live, work, play, start a business and raise a family.
With the support of the city's state and federal delegations, public investments have been leveraged fora commuter rail station, a bike path, commerce, the arts and historic preservation. Additionally, thanks to the work of many, Pawtucket is now the gateway to the Blackstone River Valley National Historical Park, with Slater Mill as its crown jewel.
The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity we have in a planned commuter rail station must be capitalized on and leveraged to spur further growth that will benefit all of Rhode Island. This transformative project will connect the people of the Blackstone Valley to Boston via affordable and environmentally friendly transit, and will also provide accessfor tourists and visitors seeking to take advantage of all we have to offer, from Slater Mill to the PawSox to the breweries to our nations newest National Park.
The transit-oriented development potential that this will unlock in the immediate area of Pawtuckets downtown and neighboring Central Falls will truly enliven Rhode Islands urban center. Development of Pawtuckets downtown and riverfront will enhance the citys diverse array of recreational, housing, entertainment, cultural, tourism and business optionsand job options.
Pawtuckets private businesses, such as Collette Tours, Pet Food Experts, Sara Bella Jewelry, Narragansett Insurance, the Gamm Theatre, Isle Brewers Guild and others, have chosen to invest in our community because they see the value and potential. Our mills that once felt the sting of offshoring are now home to small businesses, manufacturers and residents of condos and apartments. Businesses and residents alike say that additional amenities, entertainment and activity are needed to attract visitors and residents to the city and the area we have dubbed its Growth Center.
Pawtuckets Growth Center encompasses more than the Main Street area. It extends from the site of the future commuter rail station through Main Street and City Hall to the east side of the riverfront. Smart investment in this area will drive the citys future growth.
The city and its downtown property owners and businesses can collaboratively shepherd development within the Growth Center to transform downtown into a dynamic, walkable city center that appeals to modern preferences andattracts new residents and businesses.
The City of Pawtucket is reinvesting in its critical infrastructure, such as roads, bike paths, parks, and schools setting the stage for future growth and tourism. Pawtuckets waterfront has tremendous potential for high-quality development and increased public access. Master plans have been developed for riverfront parcels on Division Street and the Tidewater site. The city and state have also upgraded Festival Pier, a one-of-a-kind riverfront park offSchool Street.
Conceptual aerial maps circulated last week display various projects underway and show concepts for the potential relocation of Pawtuckets AAA baseball stadium to the downtown, and how it could fit into the citys vision for the future and catalyze planned projects. The totality of these projects could be more than the sum of its parts, creating a multiplier effect, spurring additional economic development in the region.
I will continue to take a responsible approach, knowing that my duty is to the residents of Pawtucket and taxpayers of Rhode Island. The people's interests must come first. I understand that every dollar counts. This administration brought Pawtucket back from the brink of bankruptcy. We cannot afford to waste any opportunity to spur further growth and progress.
Pawtucket is an important part of Rhode Islands future, and as a gateway to Rhode Island on Route 95 and to our nations newest national park, our future economic development is crucial to Rhode Islands progress.
Donald R. Grebien, a Democrat, is mayor of Pawtucket.
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Trump’s Flip-Flops Show Evolution Toward Moderation – Voice of America
Posted: at 11:52 pm
WHITE HOUSE
On the campaign trail, candidate Donald Trump called NATO obsolete. This week, with the NATO secretary general standing next to him at a White House news conference, President Trump did a complete reversal, saying, Its no longer obsolete.
Candidate Trump regularly denounced China as a currency manipulator. But days after his summit meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, President Trump said the exact opposite. Theyre not currency manipulators, he told The Wall Street Journal.
These and other presidential policy zigzags are the talk of Washingtons political elites.
President Donald Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping walk together after their meetings at Mar-a-Lago, April 7, 2017, in Palm Beach, Florida.
The Washington Post recently declared Trump the king of flip-flops. There is almost daily commentary arguing that the first weeks of his presidency have revealed a leader with a weak understanding of geopolitics, struggling with critical issues such as the workings of the NATO alliance.
Hes been mugged by reality, one commentator said.
In an article published Thursday, however, the Post noted that the president appears to be flip-flopping with more moderation as he gains experience.
Positions more nuanced
On issue after issue in the past 12 weeks, Trumps views have evolved away from campaign rhetoric to more nuanced positions that reflect the responsibilities of office, according to Dan Mahaffee, senior vice president and director of policy at Washingtons Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress.
Many presidents would say campaigning is one art and governing is another, he told VOA.
There is a contrast between the black and white of the campaign trail and the many shades of gray you see sitting behind a desk in the Oval Office, Mahaffee said. The adage, You campaign in poetry and govern in prose is true no matter who holds the office.
Trump himself makes no apologies for his shifting views and policy reverses. After seeing pictures of victims of the recent Syrian chemical weapons attack, Trump told a news conference that his opinion of President Bashar al-Assads regime had changed.
FILE - This frame grab from video provided April, 7, 2017, by official Syrian TV shows the burned and damaged hangars hit by U.S. Tomahawk missiles at the Shayrat air base southeast of Homs, Syria.
I think of myself as a very flexible person. I do change and Im proud of that flexibility, Trump said, as he stood alongside visiting Jordanian King Abdullah.
A day later, the president ordered a Tomahawk missile strike on the Syrian air base where the chemical attack is believed to have originated. While the strike earned him international plaudits, it surprised many at home, including supporters who had listened to him promise on the campaign trail to keep the United States out of conflicts in the Middle East.
New understanding
The further turnabout on at least three issues this week, including NATO and his campaign pledge to close the Export-Import Bank, have prompted discontent in several quarters of the foreign policy establishment.
I would say the most generous interpretation would be that hes now learning about issues that he really didnt have any expertise with beforehand, said Angela Stent, director for the Center for Eurasian, Russian and East European Studies at Georgetown University. He came from the world of real estate.
Its the same on the NATO issue, Stent said. He said consistently during the campaign that NATO was obsolete. He didnt understand why the U.S. needed NATO.
Surrounded by professionals
Luke Coffey, director of the Foreign Policy Center at the conservative Heritage Foundation, questions the mainstream narrative. He says Trumps sometimes worrisome campaign persona has been supplanted by a leader who may speak imprecisely, but who surrounds himself with professionals.
The stuff he [Trump] said about NATO in the past and Russia, I found very alarming, but yesterday he said all the right things, Coffey said. His staff, his appointments, his Cabinet, his generals say all the right things about NATO.
Mahaffee, of the Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress, says that in the final analysis, Trumps flip-flops probably wont hurt his overall approval ratings.
NATO defense spending, the Ex-Im Bank, things like that really wont resonate as much as getting the economy moving and getting jobs back, he said. While a Washington media corps that likes to keep a scorecard will be doing one thing, much of the voting public will be more concerned about pocketbook issues.
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Trump's Flip-Flops Show Evolution Toward Moderation - Voice of America
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Natural Gas Weekly: Supply/Demand Balance And Evolution Of Storage Flows – Seeking Alpha
Posted: at 11:52 pm
Total Supply/Demand Balance
We estimate that total demand for American natural gas fell to around 449-452 bcf this week (down almost 10% w-o-w, and down 8% y-o-y). National consumption plunged some 12% y-o-y, but total exports' increased by more than 36% over the same period, thus off-setting most of the weakness in domestic demand. The deviation from the norm decreased from 11% to just under 8%.
Source: GeckoiCapital
* norm defined as simple average over the last nine years
The annual decline in dry natural gas production has slowed down to just under 3%. However, we do not currently expect positive y-o-y growth in natural gas output until at least June, 2017. Increased imports from Canada helped offset some of the weakness in domestic output, but aggregate supply (i.e., production + imports) still fell some 2% y-o-y, although it did rise marginally w-o-w.
Overall, total SD Balance should be positive for the third straight week and is expected to reach as much as 100 bcf. This volume is almost twice as large as last week and some 16% above five-year average for this time of the year. In absolute terms, the balance should be bearish for the Henry Hub contract. However, as we have repeatedly said in our previous updates, traders seem to be less concerned about near-term weakness in fundamentals and are more focused on the end-of-injection-season inventory. Also, please note, that total SD Balance does not equal storage flows.
Source: GeckoiCapital
Storage
Currently, we expect EIA to report an injection of 47 bcf next week (final estimate will be released next Tuesday). Our projection is 2 bcf higher than the comparable figure in the ICE's latest report for EII-US EIA Financial Weekly Index, implying a potential "bearish surprise". Overall, at this point in time, we expect flows to storage to average 52 bcf over next three reports. Natural gas inventories deviation from five-year average is projected to decline from 14.6% today to 13.6% on April 28.
See the evolution of storage forecasts in the chart below. Notice, that we have been revising up our near-term storage estimates. Since March 31, the total for three reports went up from 125 bcf to 157 bcf. Please note that we update our forecasts every weekday.
Source: GeckoiCapital
Disclosure: I/we have no positions in any stocks mentioned, and no plans to initiate any positions within the next 72 hours.
I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
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Meet the congressman who is pushing for a Charles Darwin Day … – WJLA
Posted: at 11:51 pm
by SUSAN HAIGH/Associated Press
In this photo taken March 20, 2017, House Intelligence Committee member Rep. Jim Himes, D-Conn., questions FBI Director James Comey and National Security Agency Director Michael Rogers on Capitol Hill in Washington, during the committee's hearing regarding allegations of Russian interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election. AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -- U.S. Rep. Jim Himes has taken on the role of promoting Darwinism in the House of Representatives, saying he believes it's the type of legislation his southwestern Connecticut constituents want him to pursue at a time when skepticism surrounds science.
"I represent one of the most educated districts in the country. And so, I think my constituents expect this of me," said Himes, who took over proposing the perennial longshot legislation commemorating the birth date of Charles Darwin from former New Jersey Rep. Rush Holt, a research physicist who is now chief executive of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Himes said he has championed the legislation for several years because "science and truth remarkably always need advocacy against the forces of nostalgia and fear and irrationality." That message, he said, is especially important now in light of statements from President Donald Trump and his Environmental Protection Agency chief, Scott Pruitt, who has alarmed scientists by saying he does not believe carbon dioxide is a primary contributor to global warming.
"At the end of the day, policy has to be guided by facts and truth," Himes said.
The legislation comes as lawmakers in at least three states, South Dakota, Texas and Oklahoma, have weighed bills this year allowing teachers to decide how much skepticism to work into lessons on contentious scientific issues such as evolution and climate change. Louisiana, Mississippi and Tennessee have enacted similar laws, according to Glenn Branch, deputy director of the California-based National Center for Science Education.
Connecticut Sen. Richard Blumenthal, a Democrat, proposed a similar bill in the Senate this year. Such proposals, however, don't get very far. Branch said the legislation is typically defeated in the House Committee on Science, Space and Technology by ideologically conservative Republicans who don't call a hearing on the bill.
The bill is unlikely to ever pass Congress, given that Darwin, who developed the scientific theory of evolution by natural selection, was British.
But Holt praises Himes, a former investment banker, for taking on the legislation, which only expresses the House's support in designating Feb. 12 as Darwin Day, recognizing him as "a worthy symbol of scientific advancement on which to focus and around which to build a global celebration of science and humanity intended to promote a common bond among all of Earth's people."
Darwin, who was a religious person, didn't let personal bias interfere with him looking at evidence, Holt said. That's a stance worth celebrating at a time when ideology and opinion are crowding out evidence, he said.
"Of course, the Darwin Day legislation is more symbolic than practical, but there's an important lesson there that public issues should be informed by the best publicly available scientific evidence," Holt said. "It's really to Jim's credit that he's speaking up for this. It's harder for a non-scientist to do that."
Himes has taken other pro-science stances recently, including signing a congressional letter in December to Trump, urging the president to appoint a "universally respected scientist" to the position of assistant to the president for science and technology within his first 100 days in office -- an appointment that has not yet been made. The president has not responded.
Himes drew some criticism during his last re-election campaign for proposing the legislation. His Republican opponent, former Rep. John Shaban, called it a political stunt and a waste of time and resources.
"Indeed, I believe in both evolution and that we must pursue balanced polices to address global climate change, but passive-aggressive resolutions do little to advance the cause," Shaban wrote on his campaign website.
For decades, there have been efforts to recognize Darwin and his theory of evolution, both nationally and internationally. The American Humanist Society promotes International Darwin Day each year, calling it a "day of celebration, activism and international cooperation for the advancement of science, education, and human well-being."
A 2013 analysis by the Pew Research Center determined that 60 percent of Americans believe "humans and other living things have evolved over time," while a third reject the idea of evolution. Pew also found about 24 percent of Americans believe that a "supreme being guided the evolution of living things" for the purpose of creating human beings.
Himes, an elder in his Presbyterian church, said he doesn't see his faith as being at odds with the Darwin Day bill.
"No science can explain why human beings evolved," he said. "But we shouldn't argue with the fact that they did evolve."
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Meet the congressman who is pushing for a Charles Darwin Day ... - WJLA
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